Irish Church urges voters to reject abortion and protect life
By Philippa Hitchen
Voters in Ireland are casting their ballots on Friday in a referendum to decide whether or not to repeal a constitutional amendment which would allow the country to introduce abortion legislation.
Irish law currently recognises equal rights to life for a mother and for an unborn child, making abortion illegal except in cases where the womanâs life is at risk.
Women accessing illegal abortions can receive a maximum 14-year jail sentence, but the law allows them to travel abroad for an abortion, resulting in several thousand Irish women travelling to the UK each year to terminate their pregnancies.
Irelandâs Catholic Church has been working, ahead of the referendum, to make its voice heard in support of the âNoâ campaign, as Archbishop Eamon Martin of Armargh, Primate of All Ireland explained to Vatican News:
The archbishop described the vote as a âwatershed and historic momentâ as people are asked for the first time in Ireland, by referendum, âto discuss the equality of all human lifeâ. He notes that the 8th amendment under review is a declaration of equality of life between the life of a woman and her unborn child, âboth lives being precious, in need of protection, love, and the support of society and its lawsâ.
He said the Supreme Court has warned that âremoval of this protection will leave the unborn child with no constitutional rights, which is a huge stepâ.
Church's teaching on sacredness of life
The Church, Archbishop Martin noted âhas all along, through gentle, truthful, but loving messages, tried to teach that all human life is sacred and precious, from the first moment of conception until natural deathâ.
He said that proposed legislation seeks to introduce a âvery liberal abortion regimeâ with unrestricted access for first three months and thereafter access on health grounds, not yet defined, and possibly up to birth for life limiting conditionsâ.
Broad coalition of concern
These proposed changes, the archbishop concluded, have united all Christian traditions [around the âNoâ campaign]. But this is not simply a Catholic or Christian issue, he said, since âpeople of all faiths and noneâ have come together in a broad coalition of concern, sharing the belief that âinnocent human life should be protectedâ.
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